New Hope for the Brazilian Amazon – Rainforest Trust (2024)

The Brazilian Amazon is under siege by commercial interests that have been destroying it for profit through land-grabbing for illegal mining, logging and the expansion of agriculture and cattle farming.

The rate of deforestation in the Amazon jumped a shocking 59.5% during the four years of former president Jair Bolsonaro’s term from 2019 to the end of 2022. Since the election of President Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva, there has been a clear commitment by Brazil’s top leaders to protect the Amazon and Indigenous Peoples of Brazil. Indigenous Peoples have been safeguarding the Amazon’s biodiversity for millenia. Despite hundreds of years under a system that profited from dispossession of Indigenous lands, waters, and culture, perhaps the tides have truly turned in Brazil. These actions bring new hope for desperately needed conservation projects in the country that holds 60% of the Amazon.

Rainforest Trust has always held the rights, cultures and customs of Indigenous Peoples and local communities in the highest regard, and will continue to operate with their full engagement and Free Prior and Informed Consent in all projects we support in Brazil.

New Hope for the Brazilian Amazon – Rainforest Trust (1)

Our Ambitious Plan to Protect the Brazilian Amazon

Over the next four years, Rainforest Trust proposes to protect or be in the process of protecting 20 to 25 million acres of the Brazilian Amazon through an investment of $50 million. Our staff have been holding high-level meetings to develop new projects at the state and federal levels in Brazil. Our primary focus is to support the best local organizations around the world and help them develop the best possible projects. We will especially emphasize partnerships with Indigenous peoples and local communities that result in at least 50% of projects securing land tenure protections. Our work in Brazil will help us reach the goals of our $500 million commitment to 30×30.

Our ambitious goals in Brazil are essential to our three pronged strategy to move the needle on conservation in three of the largest remaining tropical landscapes on Earth that still have significant portions of intact rainforest: the Amazon Basin, the Congo Basin of Africa and Papua in Southeast Asia.

In January, the first project that was a result of our efforts to build partnerships in the Brazilian Amazon was launched. “Save the Brazilian Amazon” with our partner Instituto Internacional de Educação do Brasil (IEB) will safeguard over 2.2 million acres of highly biodiverse habitat through formal designations that recognize land tenure and guaranteed management rights. The project areas are concentrated along rivers—on the front lines in the fight against deforestation—where many rare birds and countless other species find their homes.

Primary forest accounts for 83% of Brazil’s total tree cover, which is why Brazil is a top conservation priority for Rainforest Trust and for global conservation.

There are approximately 138 million acres of undesignated lands in the Brazilian Amazon. As we work towards safeguarding at least 20 to 25 million acres over the next four years, various protection mechanisms will be employed depending on the particularities of the project: legalization of Indigenous and local community land tenure and management rights; creation of new or expansion of national or state protected areas; and outright land purchases to be held by in-country NGOs, community organizations and the like.

Donate Now to Save the Brazilian Amazon

Brazil is a Global Carbon Treasury

The Amazon stores 111 billion metric tons of carbon, equivalent to more than five times the combined annual emissions of the top 10 CO2 emitting nations. It is a refuge for an estimated one-third of all Earth’s terrestrial species. Its loss is unthinkable. That is why we are working harder and faster, with your support, to prevent the real danger of the Amazon transitioning from rainforest to savanna, thereby endangering all life on Earth.

New Hope for the Brazilian Amazon – Rainforest Trust (2024)

FAQs

What is the Brazilian government doing to protect the Amazon rainforest? ›

Brazil's Forest Code

In 1965, Brazil created and passed its first Forest Code, a law requiring landowners in the Amazon to maintain 35 to 80 percent of their property under native vegetation. So, rural farmers of all kinds can buy land in the Amazon, but they can only farm 20 percent of it.

Can you buy land in the Amazon rainforest? ›

The legality of buying land in the Amazon rainforest depends on the country in which the land is located. In Brazil for example, there are laws that prohibit land acquisition by foreigners. In Peru, it is perfectly legal to purchase land as long as it is not a reserved area or belongs to the indigenous community.

Who runs Rainforest Trust? ›

James C. Deutsch

What is the goal of the Rainforest Trust? ›

Rainforest Trust saves endangered wildlife and protects our planet by creating rainforest reserves through partnerships, community engagement and donor support.

What does the new Brazilian president want to do with the Amazon rainforest? ›

The Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has vowed to haul the Amazon out of centuries of violence, economic “plundering” and environmental devastation and into “a new Amazon dream”, at the start of a major regional summit on the world's largest rainforest.

Why is Brazil destroying the Amazon rainforest? ›

Many in Brazil's agriculture industry say ranching and farming, which have contributed to wide-scale deforestation in the Amazon, have helped reduce hunger in the country. Millions of people rely on cleared land for their livelihoods, yet others depend on the rain forest's preservation for their economic well-being.

What country owns most of the Amazon rainforest? ›

Nearly 60% of the rainforest is in Brazil, while the rest is shared among eight other countries—Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, Venezuela and French Guiana, an overseas territory of France.

Who is the owner of the Amazon rainforest? ›

Nine countries share the Amazon basin—most of the rainforest, 58.4%, is contained within the borders of Brazil. The other eight countries are Peru with 12.8%, Bolivia with 7.7%, Colombia with 7.1%, Venezuela with 6.1%, Guyana with 3.1%, Suriname with 2.5%, French Guiana with 1.4% and Ecuador with 1%.

How much does an acre of land cost in Brazil? ›

Farmland prices have increased by large amounts over the past few years in Brazil, especially in areas used for grain production. From 2019 to 2022, the average cropland value increased 128%, from $1,875 to $4,271 per acre.

Is Rainforest Trust legit? ›

This charity's score is 100%, earning it a Four-Star rating. If this organization aligns with your passions and values, you can give with confidence.

What is the Rainforest Alliance certified Scandal? ›

The suit, filed on behalf of plaintiff Eric Yeh and others, charges that Rainforest Alliance's certification standards lack sufficient mechanisms to ensure that Hershey's organic and plant-based chocolate products made with Rainforest Alliance–certified cocoa are ethically sourced or sustainable.

How does the Rainforest Alliance make money? ›

We finance our work and sustainability programs through diverse sources of income. The largest of them are participation royalties from certification, grants from governments and foundations, and individual donations.

What is the Rainforest Trust hoping to achieve by 2025? ›

By 2025, Rainforest Trust will have provided a lasting home for half of all known threatened bird and mammal species on Earth—and a fifth of all known threatened terrestrial and freshwater species.

What is the biggest rainforest in the world? ›

The Amazon rainforest is the world's largest rainforest by a significant margin. Compared to the Congo rainforest, the second largest, the Amazon is more than twice its size in terms of its tree cover extent, and more than three times larger in terms of primary forest area.

What is the slogan of the Rainforest Trust? ›

Save rainforests to stop climate change.

What is being done to protect the Amazon rainforest? ›

Reforesting: Bringing back lost forests

We prioritize reforestation with native species, which help restore ecosystems and ensure continued provision of ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, water regulation, and soil conservation.

How much of the Brazilian Amazon is protected? ›

Over three thousand indigenous territories have been identified within the Amazon Biome. These areas represent 35% of the Amazon region2. When protected areas are added to this percentage, 49.4% of the biome is under some type of management and protection.

How Brazil nuts are helping protect the Amazon rainforest? ›

Brazil Nuts: An Emblematic Crop of Sustainability

Because these trees produce selenium-rich nuts only when growing in healthy forests, the earnings from harvesting nuts (which accounts for more than half of the income of these families) serves as an incentive for forest protection.

What is the main reason Brazil's government supports deforestation? ›

The key provisions include: the virtual exemption of agricultural income from income taxation; rules of public land allocation that provide incentives for deforestation because the security of a claim is determined by land clearing; a progressive land tax that contains provisions that encourage the conversion of forest ...

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